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 »  Home  »  home  »  Recycling pantyhose
Recycling pantyhose
By Green Living Tips | Published  11/18/2007 | home
Recycling stockings and pantyhose

Stockings, pantyhose and other similar forms are hosiery aren't something I'm overly familiar with as a direct consumer, but I've certainly found them to be a handy item outside of their normal applications.

Mostly made of nylon, stockings and pantyhose add to our already overburdened general waste stream. The good news is that with recent changes in womens' fashion trends, stocking/hosiery consumption is declining. However, while I wasn't able to find any figures about how many pairs/sets of stockings are produced annually; the market in the USA alone is still somewhere around the $1 billion a year mark. That's a lot of stockings that are likely being thrown away each year.

Nylon is created from a process using coal as a major component. The production of nylon is also very water and energy intensive. Once these items have outlived their main purpose, usually in a relatively short time, they'll still be with us for many years to come as nylon is non-biodegradable. It takes approximately 30 - 40 years for nylon fabrics to decompose.

Once your stockings are no longer wearable; here's some handy tips for reuse that will help keep them out of landfill for longer and can act as a replacement for other items you may buy.

- Using a wire frame made from a coathanger, the stocking can make a great pond skimmer

- Place a stocking over your floor broom; you'll be amazed at what it picks up that your broom doesn't. This is especially useful in households with animals.

- A stocking or leg from pantyhose can be used as an emergency fan belt replacement. Tie the hose around the crank and pump pulleys only and be sure to cut off the loose ends from the knot. This should get you out of trouble for a short distance.

- Applying varnish or finish in hard-to-reach places.

- Tying up trees and plants. Stockings are incredibly strong - I had a 6 foot shrub blow over in the wind and used a stocking affix it to a stake. A year later and it's still in place. Stockings are soft and very stretchy, so they won't damage your plants.

- Pantyhose make excellent polishing cloths and are great for shining shoes

- Store onions or flower bulbs in a stocking leg

- Put a bar of soap (or small pieces) into a pantyhose leg and hang on your outside taps - a convenient soap holder!

- Given their ability to stretch and strenght, pantyhose and stocking can be used for various tie down applications; e.g the trunk lid of your car.

- Use old nylon stockings cleaning sinks, baths and benchtops without scratching them.

- Cut the tops off the elastic part of the pantyhose and use it as a large rubber band

- Store rolls of gift wrap, wallpaper, posters in a stocking leg to help protect them from damage.

- Store jewelry in a pantyhose leg, tying off between each item to help protect and prevent the pieces from rubbing against each other.

- Place pantyhose over growing vegetables such as squash to reduce damage from bugs. You can also hang some vine vegetables in this way to keep them off the ground.

- Tie a stocking or pantyhose leg on the outlet hose of your washing machine to help catch lint that may otherwise contribute to drain blockages.

- Use small pieces of the fabric to help remove nail polish.

- use as stuffing for craft projects such as cushions and dolls

- Place seed you've collected from vegetables in a stocking leg and hang outside to dry.

As you can see, there's far more you can do with your pantyhose and stockings after you've finished wearing them! Have some tips for reusing these times? Please add them below!


 
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Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by Beth Terry)

    The BEST thing you can do with old pantyhose right now is use them to help clean up oil spills! Check out the site:

    http://www.matteroftrust.org/programs/hairmatsinfo.html

    They collect human hair from salons to make hair mats that absorb oil beaches. They also accept "clean, used, runned nylons which [they] double, cut and stuff with the hair to make 'booms' that surround and contain as well as soak up oil spills."

    As a resident of the San Francisco Bay Area, I encourage everyone to do anything they can to help us clean up this terrible oil spill.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Maria S.)

    To help keep dust out of the inside of your computer cut a piece of pantyhose to size and put it over the cooling fans leading to the outside of the case.Don't do this for the fan for the processor or power supply as they may get too hot and melt the pantyhose. It also helps use less canned air since you don't have to dust off the delicate parts inside as often.
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by Paul)

    An additional use for old pantyhose. Use them as deodorizers under your sink, in bathroom cabinets and in basements. How? Chop herbs from Garden, a handful will suffice....then add a box of Baking Soda. Tie around drain or rafters and odors will be eaten for about 3 to four months. Use season change day as the day to change them over quarterly. But do not throw the baking Soda away....tip it down your bathroom, kitchen or outdoor drains to freshen up and clean the pipes. How? Just before retiring tip the baking Soda into the drains and then follow up with a good cupful of Vinegar. The powerful reaction will do wonders for your pipes and clean away any growing grunge based odors. On completion of this job go to your toilet and tip a dozen or so drops of food die into the cistern. Cisterns tend to leak at night when mains pressure builds up due to lack of demand. This pressure build up often causes water leakage at a rapid rate. Not only is it costly it wastes a valuable resource. If your toilet bowl water has the same color die in the morning you have a problem and a leak.

    So there is a simple way to use old Stockings....and add a few practical tasks that prevent the use of air freshener sprays, remove odors, clean drains with recycled materials and Vinegar...ie no chemicals but a powerful reaction and test your loo for leaks as well. Time to do the lot...4 to 5 locations is about 20 mins. An extra place to place a stocking full of baking Soda is in your fridge. It will eat up odors and prevent odor transfer...ie fish to milk.
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Beth, Maria and Paul - thanks for your wonderful tips!
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Jenny)

    (I'm adding too much stuff><)

    Also, for the broom thing, if it's a long one, put the stocking over it so it'll be softer and easier.
     
  • Comment #6 (Posted by Robert Schreib)

    I read somewhere that if you are making packets for blanket comforters, stuff them with secondhand pantyhose or nylon stockings, because that makes them very insulative and warm. A Longshot idea here, what if everyone tossed their ripped pantyhose in the used clothing bins, to enable some company to amass a lot of them to convert into some kind of recycled thermal insulation batting for buildings?
     
  • Comment #7 (Posted by Joy)

    Used pantyhoses also buff up candles. Just put the hose over your hand and buff away all the dust, dents, and other grime away from your candles - espescially those 14 -day or more candles.
     
  • Comment #8 (Posted by Shona)

    Check out http://www.tightsplease.com/charity.php to see how old tights donated to charity can be used for helping women recover after injury following childbirth and rugs. This is a fnatastic cause and a great way of using old tights.
     
  • Comment #9 (Posted by Nancy)

    Pantyhose is very expansive. I usually buy them in the same colour and same trademark. When there is a run in one leg, I will cut it off and recycle it. I will keep the good leg until I've another pair that one leg is ruined and I will cut off the good leg and sew it to the one leg(with the top attach)that I've saved earlier. I will have a new pair of pantyhose. It is not noticeble at all if you're wearing dark colour skirts of loose fitting pants.
     
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